It’s high time President Donald Trump and his frequent sparring partner, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, realize that the need for better controls on artificial intelligence easily outweighs Silicon Valley’s alleged need to create whatever technologies will make the biggest profits.
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Trump doesn’t want Newsom or anyone else getting involved with this issue, which has seen some forms of AI encourage children toward unhealthy eating, other self-destructive behaviors and even suicide. The idea, the president’s aides said, was to prevent states from passing “onerous AI controls” that could let China create more advanced forms of this technology than U.S. firms like Google and OpenAI.
Yet Trump has so far done nothing to rein in any harmful effects of AI, not even proposing a single reform. In reality, his move was just another knee-jerk reaction to prevent Newsom from taking leadership in a significant area and getting another leg up on Republicans in his still undeclared 2028 run for Trump’s current office.
One other reality: Newsom has not done nearly enough to protect Californians from some threats posed by AI, threats anticipated in science fiction stories as long ago as the 1940s. Yes, he did sign a few new laws that will help a bit here, but there is nothing existential among them.
One new law requires computer and AI suppliers to ask customers for the new user’s age when setting up devices like smartphones and laptops. The suppliers are then supposed to apply the new user’s age to adjust content appropriately. Another requires some programs to flash warning labels about possible adverse mental health effects of social media posts.
A third requires chatbots built into many new devices to remind users they are not talking to a human but rather a machine. The same new law requires suicide prevention personnel to be informed automatically when users show signs of distress in their postings and questions. No guarantees, though, are here that companion chatbots — those like OpenAI’s ChatGPT that simulate human conversations — won’t still be able to harm humans.
Newsom, under pressure from high-tech companies, vetoed another proposed new law that would have prevented companies from making companion chatbots available to children if they are known to be capable of promoting harmful behaviors like violence, anorexia or other self-harm. Newsom took severe criticism for vetoing that measure but argued it was too broad and could prevent children from having any AI access at all.
Even the mild measures he did sign, though, were plainly too much for Trump and some of his corporate supporters. For one thing, the laws Newsom approved are a tougher package than any other state has adopted, even if they’re still pretty weak. They displease companies like Google, Anthropic, Nvidia and OpenAI, which turned to Trump for an antidote to state regulation in their largest domestic market.
Trump’s response was to order all federal agencies to explore whether they can restrict grants to states that pass any AI regulations at all, of which California is the largest. He did not single out California, instead also criticizing other states. One was Colorado, which last year adopted a law that requires testing of AI programs and then notification of customers if any make consequential suggestions for people in their life decisions.
Rather than caving in to this sort of pressure tactic, Newsom should spend part of this year — his last in state office — encouraging California companies to adopt the kind of protections he vetoed last fall. If he doesn’t do that, he’ll essentially be bowing to Trump, a situation that’s always made him uncomfortable during the decade or so the two men’s careers have overlapped.
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com, and read more of his columns online at californiafocus.net.
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